LINTHORPE POTTERY. 
75 
pamphlet, which is now somewhat scarce, “the Linthorpe Ware 
has been designed to meet a growing want of the present day ; it 
will be found with its varied effects to accord with all the forms of 
art decoration, and to take its part in adding richness and beauty 
to an apartment without disturbing that general repose which we 
now seek to achieve in our rooms." 
Vases, inkstands, etc., with flowers and leaves beautifully 
modelled in relief were made ; and in the plain, richly-coloured 
glazes—rose bowls, tazzas, card trays, ewers, plaques, toilet ser¬ 
vices, ash trays, and many other useful and ornamental articles 
issued from the pottery, ranging in size from the tiny inch-high 
breakfast salt cellar to vases which counted their height in feet 
instead of inches. 
Hearth and other tiles were also placed on the market, as well 
as a few samples of umbrella and walking-stick handles. 
Fig. 71. Vase. Mr. O. Grabham’s Collection. 
A fine exhibition of Linthorpe Art Ware was held at the 
Dorman Memorial Museum, Middlesbrough, in 1906, for which 
a catalogue was compiled by Mr. Baker Hudson, the Curator, 
and it is from the excellent account of the Linthorpe Pottery here 
given that most of the above information is derived. 
